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Thread: Toy review - MPM-9 Movie Masterpiece Jazz

  1. #1
    Join Date
    19th May 2010
    Location
    Sydney
    Posts
    892

    Default Toy review - MPM-9 Movie Masterpiece Jazz

    Series - Masterpiece
    Sub-line - Movie Masterpiece
    Size/class - N/A
    New/remould/redeco - New
    Wave - N/A
    Released here - October 2019
    Approximate Retail Price - $160 (Zing preorder)
    Approximate Size - 16cm
    Allegiance - Autobot
    Alt-mode - Pontiac Solstice Weekend Club Racer
    Main Features/Gimmicks - Screen accuracy, licensed vehicle mode, Masterpiece detail and engineering
    Main Colours - Silver, grey
    Main Accessories - Crescent cannon, Sam Witwicky figurine, spinal column

    Vehicle mode











    A silver rendition of Pontiac's Solstice Weekend Club Racer prototype. As you would expect, there are lots of seams and panel lines, but it's nonetheless a nice-looking car.



    Jazz looks good next to Bumblebee and Ironhide.

    Sam Witwicky



    A small figure of Sam Witwicky is included. Sam is sculpted in a running pose, with the AllSpark under his right arm. It's a nicely detailed sculpt, but it needs more paint - even just painting his hair and hoodie brown would have helped.

    Transformation

    Jazz has quite an involved transformation, and unfortunately the instructions aren't always clear regarding where pieces are meant to go, particularly with the close-ups that show where pieces are meant to tab or peg into. The tabs that clamp onto the bonnet in robot mode aren't really tight or secure, so it's not difficult to unclip the upper torso.

    Transforming back to vehicle mode isn't particularly difficult, fortunately, although the first transformation or two may involve a bit of tweaking of the side windows' hinges to make sure they line up.

    Robot mode







    Beautifully detailed, as one would expect of a Masterpiece. While Jazz has a substantial folded backpack, the sculpting on it is more screen-accurate than any Jazz figure to date. He stands at about 15.5cm at the top of his head. The crotch and portions of the feet are made of diecast metal. In addition to the silver, the secondary colour is unpainted dark grey plastic. Some moulded details have been painted in gold and metallic brown paint.



    For comparison, here is the CGI model.





    The visor is retractable.

    The visor itself is probably my one aesthetic gripe with the figure - I would have preferred a blue one. It would seem that the visor was moulded on the same sprue as the rest of the transparent window pieces, as opposed to the blue plastic used for the eyes.

    Articulation is good, but other recent Masterpieces have had better articulation. The head has a hinge inside to allow Jazz to look up and down, and a rotator at the base of the neck. The panel the head is mounted on is itself hinged, allowing Jazz to crane his neck even higher.

    The shoulders have two rotators on either side of a pinned hinge, meaning Jazz can either rotate his upper arms at the shoulder in lieu of an upper arm rotator or abduct/adduct to make a T pose. The elbows are double-jointed, but the lower joint has a limited range of movement. The wrist tilts inward, and all four fingers have two pinned hinges.

    The waist is ratcheted, and the hips have two axes of rotation, with the hip panels above rotating up and out of the way. There are thigh rotators below the hips, which on my figure were very tight and needed to be 'unlocked' before they would move. The knees are double jointed, and the front of the foot tilts inwards for inversion.

    Right out of the box, some of the joints are a bit looser than I'd like, but Jazz has held every pose I've put him in.



    Jazz hands!



    Jazz includes his distinctive weapon, dubbed the 'crescent cannon' on the packaging for the deluxe class Final Battle Jazz figure from the 2007 movie. It slides over his closed hand.

    People have jokingly suggested that a Jazz figure should be able to split in half, and TakaraTOMY apparently took them seriously. Jazz can indeed split in half via a spring-loaded button, and the final accessory is a detailed spinal column that attaches to the waist...



    ...which means that you can recreate that scene from the 2007 movie.



    I had to get a bit creative with wedging Megatron's fingers in different places on Jazz, as Megatron's grip isn't really strong enough to properly support the weight.



    Jazz was supposed to be the shortest Autobot of the 2007 lineup, and this is reflected in the Masterpiece figure.

    Verdict



    Another lovely Masterpiece. The lack of substantial foot articulation may preclude placing Jazz in some believable deep, dynamic poses, but the feet themselves are large enough to support Jazz's weight.

    As with Ironhide, the Studio Series figure will probably be enough for a lot of people, and it arguably has slightly better proportioned limbs, but if you want the most detailed, screen-accurate figure of Jazz there is, it will have to be the Movie Masterpiece.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    9th Apr 2008
    Location
    WEST AUST
    Posts
    5,076

    Default

    Ooh i know who will love this. Maybe not the pull apart feature

    Anyone have ss jazz for comparison?

    They look good together just need rachet

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